Saturday, January 28, 2017

New Release: Philosophical Furnaces

New for January 2017, Philosophical Furnaces by Johann Rudolph Glauber.
https://ramsalchemy.jimdo.com/volume-17/

Be sure to visit my new Web site, where you can see information about the entire R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy:
https://ramsalchemy.jimdo.com/

More volumes are in preparation. It will be an exciting year! Thank you for your support.

Friday, January 13, 2017

Why Study Alchemy?

Alchemy has sparked an intense interest, both positive and negative, for over four thousand years on several continents.  When many people think of Alchemy, they think of the transmutation of base metals into gold. Others recall the relentless quest for the Philosopher's Stone, said to cure all diseases and to prolong life. Most people understand very little about  the Alchemist's work, and dismiss it as ancient history that seems irrelevant in today's world.

Modern physics has enabled scientists to transmute certain elements into gold in small quantities using an atomic reactor, a device that the Alchemists lacked. Modern medicine has advanced greatly since the middle ages and yet there are many diseases that currently elude cure such as the Zika virus and its relative, the Dengue virus. 

Were the ancient Alchemists's able to cure or alleviate any diseases whose cure is still out of the reach of modern medicine? Was the transmutation of vast quantities of lead or silver into gold actually performed hundreds of years ago by the Alchemists? These are very broad questions, each of which could consume volumes to help answer. 

In the work of Ruesenstein, available as Volume 47 in the R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy, the Baron speaks of a Universal Medicine as follows:


The Round Root, a Universal Medicine.

These things are called round roots and they grow between stones on the shaded side where lots of moss grows too. They can be found in the middle of the moss. They have leaves like those of a carrot, but they are very small and you can hardly tell the difference between them and the moss. The root is as big as a hazelnut and formed just like a normal root. It is so precious that 3 grains of this root can help cure all illnesses.

Schulz once said: My tincture is not in the regulus, nor in another metal; it is in Nature herself, for it is in the May dew, rain or snow. For the nature of metals is fixed, but these are open and nature is hidden in them in a natural way. The <symbol for philosophical salt> can be brought out through putrefaction or through the skill of our artists. This is both the beginning and the end of all things.



The R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy is published with permission from the Estate of Hans W. Nintzel.


Friday, April 29, 2016

The Art of Distillation by John French (1651)

I am pleased to announce that The Art of Distillation is now available as Volume 15 in The R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy.

John French (1616–1657) was an English physician known for his contributions to chemistry (in particular, distillation) as well as for his English translations of Latin and German works.
            He was born in 1616 at Broughton, near Banbury, Oxfordshire. He obtained a B.A. degree from Oxford University in 1637 and an M.A. in 1640, qualifying as a physician with an MD in 1648. He died in 1657 near Boulogne while serving as a physician to the English army.
            John French is chiefly remembered for publishing in 1651 The Art of Distillation, which is possibly the earliest detailed book on distillation. It is thought to be representative of the English chemistry of this period.
            John French was follower of Paracelsus’ school of alchemy/chemistry, which was skeptical of certain alchemical traditions yet dedicated to seeking medical uses for various chemicals and compounds. Note the frequent references to Paracelsus in this work.
This R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy edition includes more than 40 meticulously restored illustrations from the 1651 edition, and footnotes to help guide the student of Alchemy.
It is essential to the study of Alchemy that every student master the basic principles explained herein, and in particular the Four Degrees of Fire and the Terms of Art as defined in Book 1.

The R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy is published with permission of the Estate of Hans W. Nintzel.

Thursday, February 18, 2016

Finally: Chemical Secrets and Experiments by Sir Kenelm Digby!

by Sir Kenelm Digby
1682

Volume 12 in the R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy is now available. This classic R.A.M.S. work on Alchemy has been carefully reviewed,  and compared with the actual 1682 printed edition. All of the engravings were restored from the original printed edition, replacing the hand-drawn images used in the R.A.M.S. version.

Numerous typographical errors were corrected, including several missing symbols. Added footnotes indicate items of interest. For example, one sentence included the symbol for "fire" in both editions, but I believe it should have been the symbol for water. Hans Nintzel's original footnotes were preserved.

 The result is a new edition that also includes a small symbol table that shows the meanings of symbols used and verified with the 1682 edition. .

The R.A.M.S. Library edition is much improved over the original R.A.M.S. work. You should consider adding it to your collection!

The R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy is published with permission of the Estate of Hans W. Nintzel.

Friday, February 5, 2016

Ruesenstein's Processes in English!

 Selected Chemical and Universal Processes 

by Alexius von Ruesenstein. 


It is with great excitement that I have finally completed Volume 47 of the R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy! This is exciting for two reasons:

1. The R.AM.S. edition is the only English edition of the work. The German version is available, but I have never found another English edition.

2. The contents are amazing! The Baron travels with five other Alchemists who exchange stories about their various Alchemical processes, while sharing their insights into the Art. Their stories are fascinating. Many Alchemical laboratory procedures are detailed with various alternatives discussed.

Here is a short example from a discussion about the  Philosophical Mercury:


Here is a section from the Foreward:

Oh happy child, discoverer of this book and of this treasure of philosophical secrets! Praise be to you. For you will become a wise artist. For this book will tell you everything that is hidden between heaven and earth in the treasure-house of the wise art. Because it is fitting that all books on our art should have a forward or explanation, I have added this foreword here, so that you will know what is hidden in this book. You should know that great universal works of various kinds are to be found in this book. You will discover nature itself.

This is one of the very best works in the R.A.M.S. Library, almost as good as The Golden Chain of Homer. I highly recommend this book to all students of Alchemy.

The R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy is published with permission from the Estate of Hans W. Nintzel.    

Thursday, January 21, 2016

Alchemical Symbols

Many of the volumes in the R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy include alchemical symbols embedded in the text. To show you what I mean, here is an example from a scan of the original manuscript produced by Hans W. Nintzel: paragraph 3, page 421 of The Golden Chain of Homer:




The Golden Chain of Homer is widely considered one of the best works on Alchemy. When Hans asked Frater Albertus which single book he would save if his library was burning, Frater immediately selected the Golden Chain. The above paragraph illustrates the complexity of studying such a work.

Many of the volumes in the R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy contain few embedded symbols, while others are replete with symbols. The student of Alchemy would be well advised to obtain a copy of the volume, Alchemical Symbols early in the course of their studies. 

Here is another example. This is from the notebooks of Sigismond Bacstrom:


I interpret the above paragraph as:

                Take 1 ounce of your oil of antimony and 8 ounces of calcined lead, burnt to ashes according to art, imbibe your lead gradually with the oil and mix all well. Put it in a flat cementing crucible; and lute the cover on very tight. Put it in a furnace in digestion for 10 days.

While another interpretation is possible, this particular paragraph seems fairly straightforward. Once the student masters the basic symbols representing the planets, their associated metals, and other common symbols, the student can move beyond decoding the text and into interpretation and, perhaps, some level of understanding. 

Some may ask: If you can interpret these symbols, why not publish the texts in plain English instead of presenting them as Hans Nintzel did? To this I answer: I am not an expert on Alchemy. Alchemy has long been an interest of mine, but my goal is to disseminate these manuscripts for posterity. What I aspire to do is to present the works as accurately as possible.

The R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy is published with permission from the Estate of Hans W. Nintzel.


Welcome to the R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy

Welcome to the R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy. While the entire Library has not yet been released, I believe that there are now more than enough available volumes to start this hopefully informative blog. To date the Library contains over 8,000 pages of text.

You can find more details at the R.A.M.S. Publishing site.

R.A.M.S., the Restorers of Alchemical Manuscripts Society, was formed in the 1970's by Hans W. Nintzel in Texas. R.A.M.S. became a loosely organized group of modern day alchemists, researchers, typists, translators, students and others who all shared Hans's intense interest in Alchemy.

Hans was a practicing Alchemist, and he instructed  fellow R.A.M.S. members in summer camps at his home. Hans's teacher was Frater Albertus, founder of the Paracelsus Research Society and Paracelsus College. Frater's main branch was in Utah. There is still a branch of Paracelsus College in Australia.

Hans had a goal of collecting only the most useful manuscripts on Alchemy. He retyped manuscripts with the help of others, preserved the symbols used in the original writings, and had texts translated into English when necessary. For the cost of postage and copying, Hans made the retyped books available to anyone who requested them. He died on December 3rd 2000.

Many volumes in the R.A.M.S. Library have symbols embedded in their text. Hans and his wife laboriously reproduced these symbols by hand, and I have reproduced them in the Library. Volume 21, Alchemical Symbols, is highly recommended to all students of Alchemy. This is my third edition of the work, with expanded symbol tables. It now includes the previously unpublished work,
“A French Alchemical Romance and Adventure” by Hans W. Nintzel.

The original R.A.M.S. Library consisted of over 60 manuscripts. As of today, the R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy has 35 volumes available with many more in preparation. For example, Volume 5 is "Three Works of Ripley".


Sir George Ripley (circa 1415 – 1490) was an English Alchemist, author and Augustine canon. His Alchemical writings were studied by many notable people, including Robert Boyle (considered to be the first modern chemist), John Dee, and Isaac Newton. More than 200 manuscripts are attributed to Ripley. Most of them have never been published. The Three Works are:

The Compound of Alchemy; or, the Twelve Gates leading to the Discovery of the Philosopher's Stone (Liber Duodecim Portarum) was published in 1591 (London: Thomas Orwin). It was one of Ripley’s most popular works.

The Marrow of Alchemy, or Medulla philosophiæ chemicæ, was published in 1614 (Francofurti: J. Bringer).

Liber Secretissimus has the subtitle, “The Whole Work of the Composition of the Philosophical Stone and Grand Elixir, and of the First Solution of the Grosse Bodies.”


Here are the titles currently available in the R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy:


Volume Title Author or Editor
1 Twelve Keys of Basilius Valentinus Basilius Valentinus
2 Triumphal Chariot of Antimony Basilius Valentinus
3 His Secret Book Artephius
4 The Golden Work Hermes Trismegistus
5 Three Works of Ripley George Ripley
6 Four Works of Paracelsus Paracelsus
7 Bacstrom's Notebooks, Part 1 Sigismund Bacstrom
8 Bacstrom's Notebooks, Part 2 Sigismund Bacstrom
9 Summa Perfectionis Geber (Abu Musa Jabir ibn Hayyan)
10 The Five Centuries Rudolph Glauber
11 The Greater and Lesser Edifyer Johann Grashoff
12 Chemical Secrets and Experiments Sir Kenelm Digby
13 The Turba Philosophorum Arisleus
14
15
16

17
Das Aceton
The Art of Distillation
Non-Violent Destruction of the Atom

Philosophical Furnaces
Christian Becker
John French
Hans W. Nintzel and Philip N. Wheeler
Johann Rudolph Glauber

21 Alchemical Symbols, Third Edition Hans W. Nintzel and Philip N. Wheeler
22 The Book of Formulas John Hazelrigg
23 18 Short Tracts Hans W. Nintzel
26 The Mineral Work Johan Hollandus
27 The Vegetable Work Johan Hollandus
28 Lamspring's Process Lamspring
29 The Book of Abraham the Jew Abraham Eleazar
30 Five Short Works of Glauber Johann Glauber
31 The Metamorphosis of the Planets Johannes Monte-Snyder
32 Four Works of Roger Bacon Roger Bacon
33 The Golden Chain of Homer Homerus, Kirchweger, Nintzel, Wheeler
34 Alchemy Rediscovered and Restored Archibald Cochren
35 Aurifontina Chymica John Houpreght
36 The Golden Fleece Salomon Trismosin
37 The Transmutation of Base Metals into Gold and Silver David Beuther
38 Sanguis Naturae Christopher Grummet
39 A Revelation of the Secret Spirit Giovanni Lambi
40 The Holy Guide, Part 1 John Heydon
44 Potpourri of Alchemy, Part 1 Hans W. Nintzel
45 Potpourri of Alchemy, Part 2 Hans W. Nintzel
47 Selected Chemical Universal and Particular Processes Alexius von Ruesenstein


The R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy is published with permission from the Estate of Hans W. Nintzel.
Last update 1/13/2017